
RAYNA VALLANDINGHAM Taekwondo prodigy
By VAISHNAVI NAYEL TALAWADEKAR
'VALLANDINGHAM'HAS THE same ring as several surnames in southern India, and in the minute or so before Rayna Vallandingham appears on the screen, I make a mental note to ask which region it originates from. "It's Dutch," she says, moments after flickering to life, the morning sun in London haloing her heart-shaped face. "But don't worry, I get that a lot." The fourth-degree taekwondo black belt, as I will soon learn, is forgiving when it comes to questions about her ethnicity. The daughter of an Indian-origin mother and a Dutch-origin father, she has learnt to embrace the fact that she doesn't look fully Indian or fully Dutch.
What the 21-year-old also doesn't look like is someone who could take down a man twice her size. And yet, by the age of eight, Vallandingham was doing exactly that, having earned a black belt in taekwondo and being declared a bona fide world champion. "I think my parents just had really high expectations," jokes the Los Angeles-based combat queen, noting that those hopes initially centred on getting their two-year-old daughter to make eye contact with people without bursting into tears. "I was a shy kid, so they put me into martial arts to help me break out of my shell." The fact that she hid under a bench in the dojo for six months before taking her first class might explain why she was so prepared when a senior finally coaxed her out, lifting her gaze to face her opponents in combat, completely unarmed.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

Manning up
As far as Dominant Men go, we want to know them, date them and dress like them. ROCHELLE PINTO investigates why some of the most exciting style inspirations for women today are men

One for the road
Across four cities and three days, Trisha Vijay and Raj Thakker planned a wedding along Portugal's rugged coastline.

Brick by brick
After her marriage ended, Manssi Vedhya Karambelkar did not know who she was anymore. She confides in SAACHI GUPTA that building a house over 14 months helped her slowly rebuild herself too.

Men at werk
When it comes to building their fashion brand Gul Sohrab, Amit Malhotra and Saurabh Kumar are happy to take turns playing maker, manager, model and muse.

Full plate
In searching for a home away from home, Copenhagen-based food designer Priya Mani created an Instagram encyclopaedia that takes her followers through a visual journey of India's culinary legacy.

Miracle drip
NAD+ infusions have become increasingly popular, promising to magically turn back the clock. But are they too good to be true? MATTIE KAHN investigates

BACK TO BASICS
Moved by Perumal Murugan's new book, Students Etched in Memory, actor Avantika Vandanapu chats with the beloved author about how school made one of them and unmade the other.

No bad vibes
Celebrating the quiet vigilantes of Indian weddings—talismans and traditions that protect the happy couple from ill intent.

BODY & BELONGING
Navigating the tyranny of trial rooms and societal pressures, these women are redefining style by embracing their bodies and celebrating individuality, challenging the notion that thinness is the ultimate goal.

World of our own
Art can take many forms: a woman in New York making larger-than-life sculptures out of wool, two lovers in Delhi reconciling their working styles to start a fluid fashion brand and a mother in Copenhagen creating a visual archive of Indian food to ensure her children remember the flavours of home. Vogue India takes you inside their studios, where the magic happens